ROBERT DOWNEY JR. On CHRIS EVANS And CIVIL WAR

Robert Downey Jr as Tony Stark in Avengers: Age of Ultron courtesy Marvel
Robert Downey Jr as Tony Stark in Avengers: Age of Ultron courtesy Marvel

Fans soared when Robert Downey Jr. and Marvel reached an agreement for the star to keep playing Tony Stark. Iron Man will be in Avengers: The Infinity War, Part I, II.

Before Earth’s Mightiest Heroes are assembled for the third and fourth film, Steve Rogers and Tony Stark must survive their own personal conflict in a battle over beliefs.

Downey explains why he signed on for more including Captain America: Civil War.

“I’m crazy about Evans. I really am. I don’t know why or how to explain this particular kinship we have. By the way, he hasn’t called me in six months. Honestly, in order for this whole thing to have worked, I did my part, Hemsworth knocked it out of the stadium and then it fell on Cap. That was the riskiest. It was the one that had the highest degree of difficulty in making it translate to a modern audience. It was the Russos and Chris who, I think, really hit the line drive and won the series. I remember glancing through it going, “Wow, that’s a different way to go”. They said, “If we have you, we can do this or Cap 3 has to be something else”. It’s nice to feel needed,” he told Empire.

Chris Evans and Chris Hemsworth in Avengers: Age of Ultron courtesy Marvel
Chris Evans and Chris Hemsworth in Avengers: Age of Ultron courtesy Marvel

“At this point it ceases about being about announcements of contracts and deal points and Forbes and all that. And to see Chadwick being announced for Black Panther, I go, ‘Wow, man, Marvel is making all the right moves and they’re not doing it because it’s PC, they’re doing it because it’s exciting’. So why would I be the one to go, ‘I’m not going on the road. I don’t get along with the keyboardist’. Who cares? Who cares? And look, I also recognise that I’ll be turning 50 by the time I promote this movie. The clock is ticking down on the amount of memories and participation that I would allow myself and not embarrass the medium with. And when they pitched it to me and when I had a couple of ideas and when they said we like those ideas, let’s do those. Then there’s all this competition too. I don’t do this because I look at it as a competition, but I look at the marketplace and go, ‘Maybe if these two franchises teamed up and I can take even a lesser position in support, with people I like and directors I respect, maybe we can keep things bumping along here a little longer than they might have’.”

In the Civil War comic book storyline, Steve Rogers and Tony Stark have a falling out over the Superhero Registration Act leading to rival groups of heroes fighting it out.

Downey and Evans star in Avengers: Age of Ultron this May.

By Editor